Who was the subject of an advertisement in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“Runaway Negroes … going to the Governor.”
For several weeks in January and February 1776, the Virginia Gazette carried an advertisement about a canoe recovered from “some runaway Negroes” making their way down the James River. John Watkins described the canoe and noted that the enslaved men also possessed “sundry Clothes, some of which were stolen, and have since been claimed by the Owners.” He assumed that the remaining clothes belonged to the enslaved men. Watkins offered the canoe to its rightful owner and the clothes to the enslavers of the Black men who sought to liberate themselves. He did not, however, indicate that those men had been captured and imprisoned until their enslavers claimed them. Perhaps the men managed to make their escape when Watkins seized the canoe.
Whatever happened, Watkins believed that the men “were going to Governor.” That detail meant a lot to eighteenth-century readers of the Virginia Gazette and even more to enslaved people residing in the colony. On November 7, 1775, John Murray, the earl of Dunmore and royal governor of Virginia, issued a proclamation that declared martial law in the colony. He hoped to restore order as the fighting that started at Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts spread to Virginia. To that end, he “declare[d] all indented Servants, Negroes, or others, (appertaining to Rebels,) free that are able and willing to bear Arms, they joining His MAJESTY’s Troops as soon as may be.” In other words, Dunmore offered freedom to enslaved people (and indentured servants and other unfree laborers) who fled from their enslavers, joined his forces, and fought for the king (but only those Black people enslaved by Patriots since the governor did not want to alienate Loyalists). As word spread, enslaved men, women, and children flocked to Dunmore’s lines. The men who stole the canoe that Watkins advertised had good reason for acting when they did. They recognized what may very well have been their best possible chance to make good on their escape and achieve freedom. As colonizers complained about their figurative enslavement by Parliament, enslaved people saw this offer by the British as a beacon of liberty. Several months later, the Declaration of Independence counted Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation among the many grievances against George III. The charge that the king “has excited domestic insurrections amongst us” referred to Dunmore’s efforts to rally enslaved people to join him in fighting against the “Rebels” who opposed the king.



























